The deal would take the struggling telecommunications firm into the private market, paying investors about $9 per share in cash. In a press release, BlackBerry said:

"The consortium would acquire for cash all of the outstanding shares of BlackBerry not held by Fairfax. Fairfax, which owns approximately 10 percent of BlackBerry's common shares, intends to contribute the shares of BlackBerry it currently holds into the transaction."

"While being privately held would allow BlackBerry to restructure without worrying about bad news affecting its share price, several analysts have questioned how it can remain in the phone business without access to open capital markets. Its competitors like Apple and Google are among the most profitable and largest corporations in the world."

In short, over the past few years, the Canadian company has simply failed to capture the imagination of its consumers. BlackBerry said it sold 3.7 million smartphones the past three months, but compare that to the 9 million iPhones Apple said it sold this past weekend.

"If BlackBerry backs out of the deal at this point, it would owe Fairfax a fee of 30 cents a share, or about $157 million. That fee would grow to about $262 million if a definitive agreement is signed and BlackBerry walks away."